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Matches! — Buy a box of matches from a poor girl!

Of all the poor itinerants of London the Match-sellers are the poorest,
and subsist as much by donations as by the sale of their wares. The
old match, a splinter of wood, with ends dipped in brimstone, is fast
disappearing before the modern lucifer or congreve. The poor
creature here represented is appealing to a lady and gentleman, (whose sha-
dows are seen in the picture,) on their way to the

The Bank of England

This great national establishment [Victorian photograph] was erected in 1788 by Sir John
Soane: it covers about eight acres of ground, and consists of nine open
courts, almost all the rooms being on the ground-floor, lighted from above,
beneath which are very extensive cellars, used for the deposit of
bullion. This building is raised on the course of the ancient stream of
Wall-Brook. In the Pay-Hall, where the notes are issued and exchanged,
is a marble statue of William III, founder of the Bank, by Cheere.
The Court-Room windows overlook a piece of ground, laid out as a garden : this was formerly the churchyard of St. Christopher's; nearly the
whole of this parish is within the walls of the Bank, the church having
been removed in 1780, after the riots. The Bank of England is isolated
from all other buildings, and fire-proof.

References

Limner, Luke [John Leighton]. The Cries of London & Public
Edifices from Sketches on the Spot. London:
Grant & Griffith successors to Newberry and
Harris. Corner of St Paul's Church Yard,
[1847].
Internet Archive version of a copy in the University of Toronto Library. Web. 17 September 2013.